Lucy in London
Lucy in London is a 1966 prime-time TV special produced and directed by Steve Binder, co-produced and choreographed by David Winters[1] and sponsored by Monsanto Company. The program starred Lucille Ball, Anthony Newley and the Dave Clark Five and was filmed entirely on location in London.
Lucy In London | |
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Directed by | Steve Binder |
Produced by | Steve Binder, David Winters |
Written by | Ron Friedman Pat McCormick |
Starring | Lucille Ball Anthony Newley Dave Clark Five Wilfrid Hyde-White |
Music by | Billy Goldenberg Irwin Kostal Phil Spector |
Cinematography | Fouad Said |
Edited by | John M. Foley Bud S. Smith |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | CBS Television |
Release date |
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Running time | 60 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Plot
Lucy Carmichael (Lucille Ball), arrives in London to claim a free day trip that she won in a jingle contest. She is expecting a luxury limousine tour of the city, but instead is greeted by a tour guide named Tony (Anthony Newley) who escorts her in a motorcycle with an open sidecar. Their initial stop, for punting on the River Thames in an inflatable raft, ends disastrously when they collide with a rowing team and sink beneath the waters. Tony then takes Lucy to the heart of London's shopping district, where she models the latest mod fashions in a musical number based on the Phil Spector tune "Lucy in London".[2]
Lucy is then escorted to Madame Tussaud’s wax museum, where she is frightened by a curator (Wilfred Hyde-White) whom she mistakes for a haunted wax statue that comes to life. She then visits a British manor, where she plays Kate opposite actor Peter Wyngarde in a scene from the William Shakespeare comedy The Taming of the Shrew. Lucy and Tony return to the Thames, where they sing Pop Goes the Weasel as a duet. The Dave Clark Five turns up to sing London Bridge is Falling Down.[2]
Lucy and Tony then arrive at an empty theater, where Tony dons a tuxedo and sings a medley of songs from the Leslie Bricusse-Anthony Newley show Stop the World – I Want to Get Off. Lucy follows him with a mime act and a song where she shows her appreciation of her London adventures.[2]
Production history
Lucy in London came about as part of Lucille Ball's 1966–67 contract renewal with CBS. At the time, she was producing and starring in The Lucy Show for the network. The agreement gave her the option to star in three specials that would be produced independent of her weekly program. Ball originally planned a production where she would co-star with Mitzi Gaynor as two nuns touring Europe, followed by a French-based production called Lucy in Paris and a Middle Eastern comedy called Lucy in Arabia. None of those projects gained footing, and instead Ball, through her company Desilu Productions, opted to shoot Lucy in London.[3]
The concept for Lucy in London was set up in an episode of The Lucy Show called "Lucy Flies to London". Much of that episode, which involved Lucy’s unfamiliarity with air travel, was based on an unsold pilot written and shot in 1960.[4]
However Lucy In London itself was not explicit in its connection to The Lucy Show. Subtle references were made to The Lucy Show including her winning the jingle contest but explicit references like Lucy's surname Carmichael and that her boss is Mr Mooney were avoided. It seemed that Lucy In London was written this way to accommodate viewers who may not have been watching The Lucy Show at all. In fact Lucy In London was promoted as a special in its own right but not as part of The Lucy Show.
Laurence Olivier was signed to appear in Lucy in London, but withdrew from the production prior to shooting.[3]
Ball went through 15 different wigs during the production. Cleo Smith, Ball's cousin and the executive in charge of this production, later recalled that problems arose in photographing the star on the London locations, where the use of heavy stage make-up and filtered lighting that was employed for her studio-based program could not be repeated.[3] Ball's biographer Geoffrey Mark Fidelman would later remark that the actress "looked old" throughout the show due to difficulties in establishing flattering lighting for the outdoor sequences.[4]
Lucy in London was broadcast on October 24, 1966, replacing both The Lucy Show and The Andy Griffith Show for that evening. Viewership was high for the special (finishing as the most-watched telecast of the week) but critical responses were very poor, with Variety complaining: "What had promised to be one of the season's major specials turned out to be a major disappointment." Ball opted not to pursue the creation of the remaining two specials in her contract.[3] (Ball did co-star in one other special earlier in 1966, Carol + 2, which starred Carol Burnett, had a much better reception and would be re-aired in 1967 to fill one of the spots of the two unproduced specials.)
Additionally, Ball had starred in a special in 1965, The Lucille Ball Comedy Hour with Bob Hope (that is not to be confused with her similarly-titled series of television specials with the cast of her prior show), although that special was not part of the contract that gave way to this production.
Lucy in London is included on the DVD release of The Lucy Show - The Official 5th Season.[5]
References
- "Lucy in London (TV Movie 1966)". Retrieved 11 December 2017 – via www.imdb.com.
- "Film Threat". Film Threat. Retrieved 11 December 2017.
- Sanders, Coyne Steven, and Gilbert, Tom. “Desilu: The Story of Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz,” 1994. Harper Paperbacks. ISBN 0-688-13514-5
- Fidelman, Geoffrey Mark. “The Lucy Book: A Complete Guide to Her Five Decades on Television,” 1999. Renaissance Books. ISBN 1-58063-051-0
- Lambert, David (2011-09-12). "The Lucy Show - 'The Official 5th Season' Formally Announced; Includes 'Lucy in London'". Archived from the original on 2011-09-26.